I ~ \ II 0 ALVORD & HITCHCOCK; Publishers. VOp3XE ,XXXTX. TERRA OF PUBLICATION. The Basra , Onn ReposTan U published sem Thursday morning by 8. W. ALTOItD and J. E. HITCHCOCK, 11/ Two Dollars 'per aannM, In M. ilthee„ 047 Advertising In all! eases exchislre of tab serlptlon to the paper. SPECIAL NOTICES Inserted at Tarr CSNTS line for ant Insertion, and FlVlentratTS perllne for each imbsequent Insertion. LOCAL NOTICES, rlFTaas CZXTS a line. ADVERTISEMENTS will be Inserted according to the following table of rater: Iw 4w I lint $250 I 1 6 . 00 1 ir7 MI Inehes .1 1.50 I 600 I 8.00 11070 1 15.00 20.00 3 inches I 2.60-I 7.00 10.00 111 allasalLUl 4 Inches 13.00 I 8.50114.00 I ISM I 2.6.00 I =OO cormni 5.00 1 12.00 1 16.03 1 20.00 124.00 1 115.1X1 col!nin 1 10.00 1 20.00 1 25.00 1 35.001 60.00 175.00 1 column 1 20.00 1 40.00 1 60.00 1 80.00 I 100.00 I 150.00 Administrator's' and Executor's Notices, 12; Auditor's Notices, f 2.30 : Business Cards, avenues. (per year) et, additional lines II each, 'Yearly. advertisers are entitled to quarterly Changes. Transient advertisements must be paid for in advance. All resolutions of associations; ciomthunicatlons of binned or individual intemr, iLand notices of marriages or deaths, exceeding eve lines are charg ed TEN CENTS per line. mhe Rgeoutan having a larger circulation than any other paper In the county, mattes It the best idverl icing medium In Northern-Pennsylvania. 1.108 PRINTING of every kind, in plain and fancy colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills,. Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Bilibeada, Statements, &c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice. The RsPOitign educe Is well supplied with power presses, a good assort ment of newi type, and everything hi the printing line can be eiecuted In the most artistic manner and at the loWest rates. TERMS INVARIABLY CASIt. 4lasiness r!••W..RYAN, ‘_A • _ , COUNTY SUPEIIINTENDICNT. Office day last Saturday of each month, over Turner & Gordon's Drug Store, Towanda, Pa. Toicanda, June,2o, 1878. ELSBREE. A; SON-, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA. N. C. ELSDR4 MEM PORTRAITS AND LANDSCAPES Painted to order at any price teem 45 to 0500. Oil Paintings lie-Painted. Re-Touched, or changes • made as desired. All wprk done in the highest'style of the Art. .TOll ANN F. BENDER. Towandat•Pa.. April IS, iS7B. • RO,GALSKI, Employed with M. Ifendelman.fer the Past four years, begs lease to announce to his friendaind the puplic generally that he has remyged tri the Boston its-Celt Store, one door south of,Zie Ftret National Bank, and operled a shop ,for the repair of Watches, Clocks. Jewelry, Ste. All work war ranted to give entire satisfaction. (Apr4'7B, \ S . J. YOUNG, : kr-ruirsEr-ci.1...v, TOWAN DA, PA. OfflcC--second door south of•the First National Bank Main St., up stairs. D. KINNP,Y, ATTQIINI:Y•AT-LAW. Officc—Rooms formerly occupied by Y. 3f. C. A If,Tailing Room. ' dan.3llB. - WILLIAMS & ANGLE, .y r 1 A TTOUN , In" F. 4 T. LA W . OFFR, E.—Formerly occupied by Win. Watk zit, Esq. lI..N:*!LLTAMS. (net.l7. '77) , Z. J. ANGLE T McP,IIERSON, 1. ATTORNE.V.AT-LAW, TOWAND A,. PA. Diet Atry Brad. Co • MASON .lIEAD, ATTMINEYA-AT-LAW, Towanda, P 4. Office over Bartlett dc Tracy, Maln4t. G. F.M A goN. 1 - ;19 . 77) - ARTHUR lIEAD. L. HILLIS, L. TTOIIN EY-AT-L AW, TO A NDA, •PA. -7 0 4 F. G:OFF, IP • A TToti-r.vEY-AT-LAw, Main Street (&-doors north of tWard flOuse). To Pa. (April 12,1877. A T W I I M ° 'I I A I LUI2 - 4 N i l A A : l: 4l T ri ° ii ll at N tft Y d to all business entrusted to his care In Bradford, Sullivan and Wyoming C6unttel,. 0111ce with Esq. Port- . • [novlD:74. C. L. LAMB, kJ. . A TTOR NEY•AT-LA W, • WIJ.KES-11Alt RE, I'A Collections promptly attended tot J OHN W: MIX, AIrOIINICY.AT.LAW AND U. S. eIiMMISSIONICH, T)3VA I),t, TA. Mace—Norm Sldc Public Square, I) A VLES k CA p.NOCHAN, A TTOBNILYIS-AT•LAR, .3II`E Olr WAEI) 1(0178E. TOWAtiDA; PA, Dec 22-75, R. S. M: WOODBURN, Physi cian and Surgeon. Office °ter 0. A. Black's 'ruckery stem. Tcwanda, May 1, 18V:1r. _ MADILL - & CALIFF, A Tiinui In' 6-A7-LA W, TOWANI)A, PA. (Mee In Wood's Mock, first door soutl of the First . National bank, up-stalrs. H. J. MADILL. , ;lane-731y] J. N. CAMPY. CI =LEX' (Sr, PAYIsIE, A TTORNEYA-AT•LAW, South side Mereur Block (rooms formerly occupied by Dartes.& c . atmochau), TOWANDA, PA. (1477) . a. n. PAYNY =I J AMES WOOD, A TTOR N EY-AT-LAW, TQWAND A, PA. - nich9-76 CHAS. M. HALL, ATTORN'VX-AT-LAW AND NOTARY, Will give ct , rerni attention to any Irnalneas entrust e4l to him. MECO With Perk& & FOyl o , j ,, nrnallke). Towanda. Pa; Puner77.. GEORGE D. STROUD, A TTORNE.Y-AT-L A W Office —3tatu-st., four doors North of .Ward }louse Practices to Supremo Court of Pennsylvania and Unltett TOWANDA: PA Sires Cunrts.—f. Dev7.;7B. I L. STREETER,! ATToIriNV-AT-LAW . , a•i7,20 flvEirroNlitt 'MERCTIR, k--7 w, TOWANDA, P . • 0 flee crrer Montanyes Store. onay U An. IP E R O N . TON. RODNEY A. MERCR. A - Apf. MAXWELj.,, v. ArroONEY•ATtI , Avr. TOW A DA, PA. o:tre over 1:11v1orez Store. , Aprlll2. MC pATItICK & FOYLE, ATTOSNETB-AT-LAW, TOWAXDA, re. Offlee, In Meteurs Block: ANDREWO • ATTORNEY-AT-74W • Office over Cross! Book Store, two doors north of gtevens & Long, Towanda, Pa. May be consulted n Gerunin. (April 11,"74.] =Z= GENERAL 7lc S I R N7Q .E G E - N 0, m5728.70f., - TOWANDA, PA. INSCEANCi AGENCY. The following •* RELIABLE AND' FIRE TRIED C914;11166 reptwatedl; L A NCSIII4IE,PMENI V,OOIIE,7ItERCHANTS, March 16, '74 -\ 0. H. BLACK.- OVERTON & SANDERSON, _ . ATTONNZT.AT.LAW, TOWANDA.. PA. E. OvizTow, as. JOHN F. BANDLIHION. W r B. KELLY, Dzxrurr. - -office • over M. Z. Rosenfield's, Towanda. Pa. Teeth inserted on Gold. EUtom Rubber, and M ama= base. Teeth extracted without Fain. Oet. 3442. ,m I em I lyr ;so I WA* !Moo • • Af -D. PAYNE, .*D., JL:J• _ 'Pnysieux AND SURGEON. Ocoee over Kontanyes. Store. Ocoee hours from 10 to 12, A. 11,, and from 2 to 4, P.l. Special attention Meant° diffsses of the Sie and ltar.:-0ct.11,,764f. DR. T. B. JOHNSON, PIITRICIAN AND SORCIECT. Oaks orer Dr. Porter it SonlDin Store, Towanda. 3=l-75U. 1864. 1876. TOWANDA. INSURANCE AGENCY. Zan Sh ed opposite the Cour KOllll4 W. S. VINCENT, kNiGEIt. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, CAPITAL PAID IN. SURPLUS FUND.... This Bank offers unusual facpltles fortho trans• action of a general banking busineia. JOS. POWELL, President EAGLE HOTEL, • (SOETTIVSTDIC PILTBLIC BQUARTO ThIS well-known house has been ihorongfily ren novOed and repaired throughout, and the proprie tor la now prepared to offer first-class aecomtnoda tions to the public, on the moat reasonable terms. -E. A. JENNINGS. ' Tovianda, Pa., May:, 1878. HENRY HOUSE, . . L. Etsn nix. CORNER MAIN A WASHINOTON STREETS This large, commodious and elegantly-furnished henna has just been opened to the traveling The proprietor has spared neither pains nor expense In mating his hotel first-eass in all its appoint \ merits, and respectfully solicits a ;there of public patronage. MEALS AT ALL 11015115. Terms tesuit the times. Large stable attached. - • _ WM. HENRY, PROPIII aron. Towanda, June 7, '7741 - 1 1 . 4 LW \ ELL HOUSE , TOWANDA , \ JOHN SULLIVAN Having leasenhis. house, is now ready to worn modate thetrsvelling public. No pains nor expense will be spared to give satisfaction to those who may give him a call. Ifir'North aide of Public Sqi am, east of Menus'a new block. THE CENTRAL HOTEL, ILSTF.It, PA. ' The undersigned having taken possession of the above hotel. reipectfully solicits the patron age of his old friends and the public generally. augl6-tf. M. A. FORREST. .Q.EELEY'S OYSTER BAY AND EintOPEAN HOUSE. - 7 A few doors sonthof the Means House. Board by \ tint day or week on reasonable terms. Warm meals served at all hours Oysters at wholesale and retall.\ MOW. ■ I [feb.r7B. (n0v11.75 SUMMER July 27,•76 CASH PRICES ! Jan. 1, 11175 I HAVE NOW ON HAND-4 FULL LINE OF Figured Lawns; Figured Lawns, White Goods, White Goods, Buntings, &c. • Buntings, &c. Fans and Parasols j1y17.73. IN GREAT VARIETY AT REDUCED P.RICE3.. Towr.da, PI., June ICI. m4'l I- tusinus Cards. 'TOWANDA, PA. $123.000 .... ...... 80,000 N. N. BETTS, Cashier. 'Feb. 14. 1/178 Hotels. (ON Tilt MUM:WEAN PLAY,) TOWAND•, PA MEE GOODS ! J. L. KiINT. . .. . . . . . . . . „, . .. . .... , .. . . -• . . - - - „ - - • . . . • . . . . • ...,. • . . . . - ..- . . . . ... . , . • . _ .. . , .. . ... , " . - ' ••.... . . _ ...,. ~ . . .. . . . .. . - . ": • . . ... . . . . . , . . . --- . • .. . . . .. .. . .• . • . .. . . . .... _ , .. ,„ .. • ~.• ._. , . . . . - .... .- , 1 . : . •.. . . , .. . . . .. ' • ,' ' .„..: • ._ -( I r.• , - - .. , ....i., . . . ~.-+ • • . ' ..... ‘...- . •. .. . . , . .., --ft. 's... .. "ita b - 1 . . ----"% '.... ------.'N .- .. . . . ~ \ , .. '' \*s . 11111 1 : . . , . . - , . . . • • , . . . . .• _ . , . . „. ..... . • . . . . .. , . , • • , , , -' - - - - . ' • • . \ - • . . • . . . . . . - - .• . . _. • • ' .... • - . _ ... • . , . . . '. . . - -, . . . • ' ... . . . , • - . - • . • . • , . . . . . • .- . . • , . . g Putt. I=l TEE BOYS. BY .1. P. 'Ts u put of My weddh•g portion, This spot where the old hoax stands. And I had the choosing of it - .From all of my father's lands.. . We wore young, but we were not foolish, Or wasteful, you may depend, And my mother always taught me 'Twig better to are than spend. For awhile; yon know, It was lonely..p' With me In the house all day, . And no one to come nigh me To hear what I had to sly ; But when I eat with my baby, My boy, asleep In my arm, I dtdn•t moth care for the neighbors, Or anything else On the farm. There was Jack and Den, you remember, They were all that I ever had; tnd Jack was his Mothers Idol Thongh Den was a likely lad. And we saved up every penny', Nor envied . another'. Joys, For a little 'farm la a little cramped For a Couple of growing boys. .i - Imes bent on their having learninr, For I Wanted my Jack and Ben _To be able to semi their country • • Whenevo she needed men, - Anti father said - I was slily, For he never could understand The use of spending money For anything else than land. But I kept to my wily orthleklng, And, though not otherwise, I saw • That both had a taste for study ; But Jack bad a taste for law. And I know that my prayers and prudence, Would after &While be acknowledged, And I paid for ail the trouble When I entered my boys at college. can see that father Is falling, And there Is no strength In his arm To swing the scythe In the meadow, Or do the work on the farm. Awl somehow I've lost my courage Though I try to be calm and breve, ltut-whatcan a mother do but weep, -With both her boys In, the grave? The house %rat never so lonely, • And my peor old man and I Sit oft In the chlinnercort.ei J . And dream of the days gone by. And when the too soipmn silence i fs broken by suddeh noise, We start with' the old-time gladness, And whisper: Here come the boys r. ai,ityllattron c i. INSTANCES OF HEREDITARY GENIUS Who was Aristotle ?. He was the founder of the Peripatetic school. He has been the teacher of tWenty-twO ceturies. Who 'was his father ?. Nic omachus, a friend and physician to Amyntas 11., King of Macedonia. He was the author of. works on, med icine and science. We have lost !his manuscripts, but the father of Aris totle was a' man of extraordinary ability and remarkable culture. Who was Aristotle's grandson? Nicoma dins again—the name . recurs—and according to Cicero, this grandson was the author of the book we 'mill the Niccomachian ' ethics—a work gear rally attributed to Aristotle; Who was Aristotle's cousin ? Callis thenes, the philosopher who accom panied Alexander the Great to the East. The mailer of that Callisthe, nes was Hero, a near relative of Aris totle. Who was JEscy.ltis ? He was the leader of all Greek poets, and per haps superior to Sophoeles, and even . \ tp.Euripides. He was not only king of, poets, but renowned as a warrior. Who was his brother? Cymecrirus, wlici \ fought side by.aide with ..El.schy lus at, Marathon.. In this Acropolis, there Was once a painting commemo rating-these two brothers for their action on,that battlefield. Who was his second\brother? Ameinas, who commenced the attacks on, the Per s'an ships at\Salamis. Who was his nephew ? Phiocles, who was victori ous in a poetie\contest with Sopho cles. Who were other nephews ? Euphorion and Mon, who were four Onus victorious in. poetic contests, and- founded a tragip school which lasted 125-years. Who was Cromwell ? The first American. Who was Ahis cousin ? Hampden the patriot -thesecond A merican. , You do well,; to remetn bet these names with _gratitude, Ma cauley says that Hampden mid Croni well were once on shipboard in Eng land with the intention of Coming to America for life. Cromwell, Hamp deW-and Milton were the first Airer-l c:ins. The first cousin of Cromwell was Hampden, the patriot; another \ cousin once removed was Edmund Waller, the poet. The son Henry behaved with gallantry in the.army. Who was William Pitt? A man -who gave England dignity in the four quarters of the globe. Who was his son.? The man who, throttled Napo leon between 1783 and 1801, and 1804 and 1806, as,-Premier of a pow er whose drum;heat_ was heard in all the zones. Among his relatives were Lady Hester • Stanhope, Geo. Green ville and Lord Greenville, who was himself Premier. Who was Lord Macaulay ? His grandfather was a Scottish minister of Inverary, who was mentioned by Johnson in his account of his trip to.' the Hebrides. His father was Zach ary-,--an abolitionist, who began a war which in its completion was the chief glory of Boston. Zachary Macaulay was in many respects a greater man than his son. Balanced, deeply phi losOphieal,-a massive soul, he went to the coast of Africa, he bore persecu tion there, he bore it for awhile with Wilberforce in England, in order to carry past, its, breaking that earliest slowly rising wave of anti-slavery, of which we now hear the retreating murmurs, half a million corpses borne floating within its green breast. Who was his uncle 7 Aulay Ma cauley, a distinguished controversial ist Who was his fir - ate - main? John Heyrick, bead master of Ripton, a renowned - scholar. Who was his nephew ? George Trevelyn, a mem ber of Parliament and junior lord of the treasury, and author of Cairn - pore. Assembled here upon the Acropo lis, lo6k about upon all the summits of intellectual, moral 'and social de velopment, and you will find a sun rising behind them—a truth to which the ages have as yet hardly listened —that blood means God. Behind many clo.u4s there _brightens slowly in the rear of these summits in Atti ca, in Oerinany,,in France, in Eng land, a meek; soft overawing dawn •splendor, prophetic of new' eras. TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY,: . 4, , MBMDAY MONING, AUGUST 15 POSTAGE STAMPS._ A DESCRIPTION OP THE PROCESS OP MAX- . . A New Y or ko correspondent thuti de: ribes the process of making post age :tamps for the GlOven:Mint at an estab*shment k in thatcity: Afte the paper is "wet doWn," as the pri t ens . sayevery . hundred -k \ sheets being counted, and the number marked by projecting tag—it is to; ken up to th printers. _Each sheet is of the righ size . for •making 200 stamps, of the ordinary size. Curl ously enough; n eof the gentlemen of whom I inquired. Seemed to know what paper -mill maltesthe paper; but It is made especeallfor the.purpose. .17 The printing-room is, crowded with the . hand-presses u for • printing the stamps ; no fewe r •, lum eleven presses being in opera Ton. Each. ' press 'hat:three persons in attendance —one to . " tend presq' one ink the plate, - and one-'_the "printer"—to brush off ill , the ink (in a Won& NW swift. and dextrous' way,) , fro m th e surface as soon as it has been put n. The reason of this, which • would otherwise be a piece of self-stultiflet tion, is that the stamps are .'I. counter sunk," - or cut . in, and the ink is not wanted above them, or on the plane surface. It would cost too much and take too long to prepSre separate steelstitgraved dies for every stamp; so a case-hardened steel die is made, down at the Continental •Bank Note Company's, all carefully , engraved and cut away to perfection, and then a Steel plate so ft ened for th e purpose is. by machinery rolled over the die, which leaves-its impress,- every time, until the entire plate is hardened and ready for use—one for every printing Press ih the rooni. These are hand presses, and the cylinder that makes the impression is - merely turned by a single whirl of the wheel, obtained by the leverage afforded 'by the pro jecting spoketi or handles. It is all - done in a surprisingly quick way; and ;there is no' "lost motion" of wheel, cylinder or elbows. "The ink varies according -t o the kind of stamp. Some'of the pmsses are printing the red 2-cent stamps, some the 3-cent green ones, and. eth ers different colors. Two-thirds 'of all the stamps, says the supetinten denit. are the 3-cent green ones. The "ink," a queer substance in bulk, and queerer . still when seen, on the ink ta ble and roller, is . made by the note . company, and its secret-is theirs. All they know at the printing -room is that - some kinds have "laundry blue" in them, and that all kinds are made with refence to canceling—to the effect of the dauby canceling stamp used in the post-office. For the or ange-toned :10-eent stamps (these are the highest denominations I saw) and also for one of the vermill;on'stamps a peg or two below that, the materi als are imported from Europe, and mixed in New York. All the others are wholly made here. , The different colored inks are apparently abOnt the consistency of some styles of news paper ink, but not by-any means so sticky. The " printer • who brushes off the plate the moment before it goes into the press, does it all in six swift motions—three with a sort of cloth, and three •(to conclude) with his bate hand. The operation, for deftness and . celerity, is like one 'of Heller's, the magician. The ink - is rolled over the plate with a roller made of Canton flannel. The-printers are paid by the hun dred. Precisely how much they earn I couldn't find out, but it ought to be good wages, for they " work like ' beavers." here i 4 no idling or play in that room—nor anywhere_ else in this busy establishment. The 'blank paper, all numbered, is charged .to the printer's to whom it is delivered, and the plates are also numbered and charged to them. When not in actu al use the plates are kept carefully locked up in the safe—a little room in itself. , * Each of .these eleven presses turns out 1,200 'sheets a day, or 7,200 a week. Each sheet contains 200, and as they are deliiered to postmasters only in sheets of 100 it follows that each sheet must be eut fight through the middle. This, is done by band. A girl, with a long pair of shears cuts them as accurately as a ruled line, showing what a good eye and a rapid hand can do. There is no room andthe crowded street for any error, aand the girls make none. One girl, whom I watched for a while, cut 50 sheets a minute-=ll,OOO a day r It - is a`silent cut, cut, cut—from morn ing 6, night—working as if her life depended upon it. She sits at her work. The girls are all busy tft a va riety of . 6rocesses in the preparation of the' stamps, all of whieh • require I delicacy of touch as well as swiftness, and their wages average $8 a week, or a little over. From the printing room and the drying room (t.h . latter an insuffera bly hot place, where the sheets are placed in frames on drying racks) they go to the gumming room—which is also a drying room; ,but not hot— the drying being aided\ by revolving fans a ffi xed to a shaftwhich send their influence through lofty piles of the gummed sheets in fra \ mes. The gum used is not gum arabic—that would in drying cause - the sheets to curl and crack—but is simply \ a kind of potato starch. it is made, be lieve, in Providende. A girl swiftly adjusts the edges of a heap of print ed sheets.so as to slide theth all Wep place while she deftly daubs them ate a single stroke with the mucilaginous substance, which she applies with a single motion of a wide brush. This is the substance you "lick to make it stick" on the letter you drop in the post-office. The sheets are dried in wooden frames. After the gumming and -drying, the stamps in sheets, are flattened out and made smooth by being subjected to the persuasive power of a hydrau lic press, the force being 450 tons. They are put in thin boards, which divide the several package& And after - they come out they are taken out'and counted again by girls seated at tables, who also swiftly adjust them in even-edged. heaps while counting. Let one of these damsels make a mistake, even of a single sheet, and she necessarily discovers it on the final footinip and adjust ments. Then there is a careful going REGARDLESS or lamnicuncet FROM A*7:,4atrAtuTza. INO THEM. over of all the weary piles—thou sands of sheets-4111 that lost sheep's found. _ If he doesn't turn up then the piles are turned \ around, and gone through with hoin \the edge on the side, not the opposite \ edge—and 10, the delinquent is probably found to have got turned tuder;lind so, did not report at muster', for the count is done at the edges. .\ NUNS WARREN'S FUNERAL ' --- Minnie Warren was burie d at Middleboro, Mass., on the 25th, with her baby in her arms. - - \ At two oclock the family assem-, bled in the parlor around the casket. This was of black walnut, covered with blue silk velvet, and lined with white satain. It was the casket of a child of tenlyears, but as the friends looked within they . saw The little mother .with' one arm embracing the' girl baby, whose face lay nestled close to the mother's bosom. ' The, mother's head was turned to the baby,.ank the two seemed quietly sleeping..‘ The -baby's face was: a sweet one, a little dimple remaining in the chin that even death had not taken away: No one looked upon . he little mother.and her child wio - t. weeping. Gen. Tom Thumb sat ne r the head of the casket, and by him sat Major Newell,-and he made no e ort toicontrol his feelings. He wept itterly, as he has alniost with out ceiqation -.* .hip -ife de Besides mother all large the room, as a dapf her weal a famout Barnum wife, wl Torn T 1 were .als4 :Soon being um thousai side, n el and the prayer. kindnes Lion. M her sistei fainted room. _ ___ -,,,, a dry eye theouse. A ft er another hymn had been sung, six young ladies, old frieids and mates of Minnie, took their places as pall bearers, and then the family looked, for the last time, upon ' Minnie's face. Gen. Tom Thumb could not control his grief as he turned from the casket. The doors were then opened , and the* people . passed through the parlor, looking for a few minutes at the faces of the mother and child. It was two boars before the last friend had passed and the casket , closed. Borne oy four-young men the casket was placed in the hearse, and, follow ed by many carriages, taken to the villiage cemetery. Here, after the benediion, the casliet was lowered l into ft e little grave. Many, stood near e % c en after the clergyman had dismissed them. • The death of Minnie Warren will probably end the public appearance of the Tom Thunib party. Minnie's death was undoubtedly . caused by maternal love. Had she listened to the advice of the physician sooner, her own-life might have been saved, although her child would have been , lost to her. But she would not until it was too late. During her' sick mks she seemed to think of nothing but the baby she soon hoped to fold to her bosom. " I shall -live," she said to her sister, Mrs. Sou!,hworth ; and after her,babylas born, she said with a smile, "'I new I should. lire; take me and_rok me." The sister took Minnie in n er arms as she would an infant, anrocked her. "Don't cry," said Minnie, "I shall live through _it." Then, after a little, she said, " rock me on the, other side, sister." Mrs. Soutbworth did so, and Minnie was quiet for a little while. At length she said with a sigh, " I don't know whether I shall get through after all. Please put me on the bed, I feel very badly; I am afraid I can't live through it." The sister put her tenderly on the bed. lln a few min utes, without anotherivord and with only a gentle sigh, Minnie died, thrge hours after her baby ins born. The llt baby was a ntiful child, robust, sad weighed rise one seventh i3f Minnie's weig t, six pounds. , s ......-.-----. . PRESCRIPTION FOR FITS. For a Fit of Passion.—Walk out in the open air. You may speak Your mind :to the winds without hurting any ope, or, proclaiming yourself to be a 'simpleton. " Be not• hasty in thy s t tirit • to be angry, for anger rest eth i the bosom of fools." For a Fit of /dtenc4t4.—Count the tickir gs of a clock. Do this for one hour, and you will , be glad to pull off your mat the next and work like a man. " Slothfulness casteth into a deep pleep;and an idle soul shall suf fer hunger." .Ftr a Fit of Extravaganee and Folly.—Go to the workhouse •or speak with the ragged sand wretched inmates of a jail, and, you will be convinced "Who makes his bread of brier and thorn Must bo content to He for orn." "iWherefore do'ye spend money for that which is not bread ? and your labor for that which satislieth not ?" For a Fit of Ambition.—Go to the churchyard and read the gravestones. They will tell you the end of nrin at his best estate. " For what is your life? It is even a vapor , which ap . peireth for a little time and then van isheth away." " Pride goeth before destrUction, and a haughty spirit be fore a NV lbrFit of Repining.--Look about for \ the halt and the blind, and visit the bed-ridden, the afflicted, and the deranged ; and they will make you ashamed of complaining of your light afflictions. 41 Wherefore doth a living man complain 1 1 " for a Fit of 'Envy.—GO and see bow many who keep their carriages are afflicted with, rheumatism, goat and dropsy ; how miuy walk abroad on crutches or stay at home wrapped up in flannel; and how Many are sub ject to epilepsy,and apoplexy. " A sound heart is the life of\ the flesh. Envy is the rottenness of th > bones." AN \ AWFUL WARING TO TOTING \ HUBBARD" A yoring wife in Michigan had just got 'isettled in her new home. All seemed fair \and promising, for she did not knorr,that her husband was a drunkard. Bet one night 'he came home at - a very late - hour and much the worse for liquor, When he stag gered into the house his wife, who was hreatly shocked, told him he was' sick and to lie down"at once, and, in a imoment or two 'he was qiiite comfortably settled ona sofa in a drunken sleep. His fat* \ was reddish purple, his breathing was heavy, and ,altogether he was a pitiable \ looking - AThe doctor was sent for post,haste and mustard applied- to his feet and has. When the doctor came 'and felt his pulse and examined him and found that he was only - drunk he said : ,\ " He will be all right in the, morn ing." \ But the wife insisted that he was very, sick, ands that severe remedies must, be used. \ "You must shave his head and apply blisters" she urged, " or I will send for someone yTho will." The husband's head was accord ingly shaved closely and blisters ap s The patient lay all riiht in a drunk en sleep, and notaithsianding the blisters were eating into his flesh, it was not till morsing that he . began to beat about disturbed by pup. At daylight he woke upto ti\most uncomfortable conscionsneei of blist ered agonies. \ " What does this mean ?"•he said putting Ms hand to his bandaged\ bead. "Lie still—you musn't stir," said his wife; "you have been very‘sich." "I'm not sick." "Oh I. yes you are; you have the brain fever. „Tire have worked with yon all night." " I should think you had," groan-, ed the poor victim. "What's the matter with my feet?" "They are blistered." " Well, I'M better now; take off the blisteri—do," he pleaded piteous ly. He was in a mosLuncomfortable state—his head. covered With sores, d , his feet and bands were still w • rse. ' I ear," he said groaning, if I show d ever get sick in this way again, don't be alarmed and send for a clod, and, above all, dotn't blister me agar " "Oh 1 l 1 deed I will ; all that saved you were t e blisters, and if you have another sue spell I should be more ) frightened tl n ever; for the tend ency, lam su ; 'is to apoplexy; and from the next ttack you will be likely to die n otes there are the se verest measures usqd." He made no furth r defence. Suf fice it to say, he nev had another attack. _ _ - S _ARENOTR Of GREEK s 1 LDIERS.— The physical superiority. • the ante- Alexandrian Greeks to th • hardiest and most robust nations o modern times is perhaps best illustra • I by the military statistics of Xen ' bon; According to the author of the ' An absis," the' complete accoutrem uts of a Spartan soldier, in • what • e would call heavy marching orde weighed seventy-five pounds, exclu sive of the camp, mining and bridge building tools, and the rations of bread and dried fruit 'which' were issued in weekly installments, and increased the burden of the infantry soldier to ninety, ninety-five, or even to.a full hundred pounds. This load was often carried at the rate of four English miles an hour for twelve hours' per - diem, day after day ; and only in the, burning deserts, of Southern Syria the commander of the Grecian 'auxiliaries thought it prudent to shorten the usual length of a day's march by one-fourth. The gymnastic tests applied by the sys tarchus, or recruiting-officer of a pick ed corps, would appear even more preposterous to 'the uninformed ex quisite of modern 'crack regiments.' Even tall and well formed men of the soundest constitution could not pass the preliminary examination unless they could jump their own height vertically., and thrice their own length horizontally, and two thirds of these distances in full i armor ; pitch a weight equal to one third their own to a distance of twenty yards, and throw a javelin with such dexterity thaethey would not 'miss a mark the siz ii of a man's head more than four out of of ten times at a distance of fift y ya s, besides other tests referring to their expertness in the use,of the bow and the broadswOrd,—'opu/ar Science Monthly. IMITATING t PETER THE GREAT. The legend of Peter the Great's ap prenticeship is brought to mind by a little story which is told by the Phil adelphia Times. In August last a quiet looking Russian of the blonde type applied - to John Roach's ship yard at . Chester for work: August Blumnner was the name higave, and previous to going there he said he had been connected in some capacity with the Russian frigate Craysser, which had a ' few days before left Cramp's Shipyard, where it had been lying some time for repairs. Blumi, ner could speak tolerably godd Eng lish, and seemed quite easy on the matter of salary telling the ship-buil der that wages was not so much an . object with him' as the acquiring of knowledge as to the American meth od of building ships.. He, was in the employ of his own Government, he said, and received a regular salary from it. Mr. Roach placed him in the machinists' or erecting depart ment. There he worked about three mouths. • In OctOber he gave up his situation and left-town, and his com panions bad already forgotten him when it was announced that a Rus sian naval constructor in this country was, in ,active communication with the Russian Minister at Washington, and with his own GOvernment, in ref erence, it was believed, to_fitting out American ships for cruisers. Inciden tally it was mentioned that he had been employed at Roach's shipyard. " i rtIERE is no good substitute fui wje dnm," ups Josh Billings, "but silence; is the best that baz been dipcovereld yet. \ 1,7 1:78. A LESSON TO MOTIMIIa Onel \i iight not long ago, a young girl in haunt of vice, in Philadel phia, ace dently, while at supper, yut her foot ol2 \ a parlor match, which set fire to her 1 othing. Another girl, who ran to er rescue, shared her fate; their dresses were of thin ma terial and blazed over their heads, while , I they fled shrieking to the \ street,And there h ruing slowly to death.' The men, t sir companions, stood land afforded o help. The signification part of. this horrible story is that both wome were young attractive,of good birth and social position, oth educated (one a grad uate of Vassar College); both had left homes of comfort and ease, hus bands and children, voluntarily, to take up this mode of life, which in their case could boast of no attrac tive gilding. The house in which they met,theii terrible fate was one of the lowest in its class •, the men whom they chose as friends , belong ed \to a wretched negro minstrel show—degraded, cowardly brutes who stood off . in' safety watching them die. Only two or three days ago the \ police records of our own city told an even more pitiful tale. A fatheisfound his daughter in an infamous place, and strove by legal means to take , her out.. She defied him, the hourtesustiinEd her, and she went out gaily from the court room with her vile companion, gig gling at the discomfiture of the broken-hearted father and brother, who - stood with heads bowed in shame as she passed bye ; 'The most frightful fact in our so cial life faces us in these stories. It is that there are women in the loivest ' , deep who are not driv,_en there by want or cruelty, nor led there by a betrayed affection • women who have been gently reared, educated, belov ed whose natures are so tainted that they choose to go out, like the prOd igal of old, from the home God gave , them, to feed with swine. How' many such. are hidden in these dens God only knows; how many remain in their original positions, the re cords of our divorce courts, the fol gossip with which so-called fashioi. able society reeks, in not only this country but England; give us an ap palling hint. It. is useles to ignore this fact. Neither the pulpit nor the press, iflit means to help at all in the work of bettering our social life, ought to ig nore the fact that a certain portion of American and English , society is rapidly becoming as licentious .as that of Paris. Who is to blame for it? Not hu man nature. Women and men are born as pure as they -were a genera tion ago. Not Christ's religion. His hand is as strong to save , the Mag. dolt* in the streets of New York as of Jerusalem. It is the mothers who are to blame. Mothers -in fashiOn able society in the , cities, and in that society which feebly apes the fathion in town and villages and farm places from Maine to Orogon,whobefore their daughters, from Melt. birth, dress, and show and style, as the sole god, they are to - follow. We venture, to say that - " Style," that most. vulgar of words and things, has done as much to'cortupt the women of America as liquor has. Not only was it the cause of our financial downfall, but modesty, hon i,:sty, decency are sacrificed to it. #iaru_ ter :of a good business man. The, world itself embraces both truth and' honesty, and the reliable man must necessarily be truthful and ' honest. We seeso much all around _us that exhibits the absence of this crowning quality that we are tempted in our billious•moods to deny its very exist ence. But there are, nevertheless, reliable men to be depended upon, to be trusted, in whom you may repose confidence, whose word is as good as their bond, and whose promise is performance. If any of you kno such a man, make him your frien . You can only do so, however,. by as) • aimilating-his character. The reliable man is a man of good judgment. Be does not jump at con clusions. He is not a frivolous man. Re is not a partial or:one-siden man. He sees througli a thing. He is apt to be a very reticent man. ne does not have to talk a great deal. He is a moderate man, not only in habits of body, but of mind. He is not a passionate man, if so by nature, he has overcome it by grace. He is a sincere man, and not a plotter or a schemei;. What he says may be re ,lied on. He is a trustworthy man. Youleel safe with 'your property or the administration of affairs 'in' his hands. He is a brave man, for his conclusions are logically deduced from the sure basis of triith, and he does not fear to maintain them. He is a good min, for no one can.'be thoroughly honest and truthful with out. being good. Is such a.qual ity attainable ? Most assuredly . so.. It' is not born, it is made. Character may be formed, of course, then its component parts may be moulded to that formation. You need not be afraid of. giving too much. The old darky said, "If any ob you know ob any church w'at died ob liberality, jes tell me whore it 'is, • an' 'I will take a pilgrimage to it, and by the soft light ob de pale moon I will crawl upon its moss-covered roof an' write up ou'do topmost shingle, • Blesied am de dead who die in the lord." WE DAELIIO. Why do I Wye my darling dot Good tank my heart, I hardly know. hare such a More of mums: , Twoold take me In a summer day— Nay, saying hall that I could say Would MI the circling seasons Because her eyes are softly brown, My dote, who quietly Mill down To me as to her haven Beaune her hair is soft, and laid Madomm-wiee. In simple As jetty as the raven Because her lips are sweet tb . toseh, Nor chill, nor fiery overronch, But softly warm as roses, Dearlips'ihat chasten while they more, Lips that a man may dare 10 love . Till earthly love time closes? Because her hand is soft and white, Of touch so gentle and so light,. That Whire hr tinder finger Dolls fall or move, the man to whom The guards of Eden whisper "Come !” Beneath the spelitmlght Unger? Beneath her hearths woman -soft, So true, so iender, that I oft Do marvel that a treasure • • So rich, so rare, to me should fall. Whose sole desert—so small, so anal, • Is—loving past all measure? Because she has such store of moods, • So archly smiles, se staidly broods, - ' 80 lovlugly eare!ases ; • • So that my heart may never tire Of monotone, or more desire .- . Than she, my love possesses? what know or what care Or what bath love to do with ..why?"' . flow simple la the reason! 1 lore tier T 4or she, Is my Imre, • And shall while: starshall' ine above, And season follow season. • FUN, FACT AND FAOETLS R „ A PAISLEY publkwn was comelaing of Lis sevant maid that she never could be found whentreguired. " She'll gang ooto' the house," said he, ."twenty times for awe she'll come in." _ A Woman' forgot to send home work on . Saturdy. On Sunday morning she told her Hale niece to put on her things and take the bundle under her shawl to the lady's flame. "Nobody will see it," she said. "But is. not SundaY under my shawl, aunt?" asked the child. " A MINISTER going_ to visit one of his sick parishioners, asked him how he rested during the night. "Oh, wondrously ill, sir," he-replied, "for mine eyes have not come - together these three nights." "'What is the reason of. that ?" said the .other. "Alas, sir !" said- he, "because my nose was betwixt them." Anlerial wit, while sitting in his library one evening, was greatly:disturb by a ser- . vant girl singing in a loud, cracked voice— ..714 re's a mansion in Heaven forme A light In the winder I see," " Well !" exclaimed he, after waiting a provokingly long time f or her to-stop for breath, "I am grateful that in my father's hopie there are many mansions !" REcrarrix a wealthy and eccentric citi zen, called upon the \ undertaker of West field, Mass. ' to pays bill , for burying a member of his family. - The account was handed to the gentleman, who, taking-it, stood for some moments in a. contempla ti re mood, eyeing it closely and'murmnr ing an accasional . "Hum," "htim." . " Anything wrong in the bill ?" inquired the undertaker., " No,"replied the honest old chayy ." but I was wondering how poor people ?are to die in. this \town." A YOUNG and pretty girl stepped into a shop where a spruce young man, who bad long been enamored but dared not ispealc, stood before the counter telling drapery. In order to remain as long as possible; she ,chenpened everything, and at last She 'said, "I believe you think I am cheating you. ' "Oh, no," said the youngster ; "to .' me you are' always fair." "Well," whispered the lady, blushing," as She laid an emphasis on the word, '1 wouldnOt stay so long bargaining if you were not so dear." SALUTATIONS. With us the usual modes of saluta tion consist in shaking hands;reinov ing the hat or courtesying, accom panying the action with the words; " How do you do ?" or " How are. you ?" -Rand-shaking takes its rise in the ancient custom of enemies seiz ing each other by th right or yr eap , on hand to, guard a gainst treachery, while treating of a truce. The re moval of the hat is a relic of the old custom Of putting by the helmet when no danger was to be apprehend. ed,_ as if one would say, "I dare stario unprotected in your presence." Wo men formerly knelt before men of rank to plead for merry, and later to ac knowledge inferioi:ity. From . this we get the ecitirtesy. The negro !Kings on the African coasts salute each other by snapping the middle finger three times In Otaheite they, rub noses, a ens tom common with many savages. . The inhabitants of Carmine, when they show particular attachment, open a'vein and-present their blood to their freind to drink. 1 The Japanese remove eslipper; and the natives of Arracen their san sdals in the street, and their stockings in the house. \l'hillippine Islanders take a per sates hand or foot and lib it over their\faces. Laplanders smell of the persons they salute. In the \ Straits of the Sound they raise the left foot of the person ad dressed, and pass it over the right leg and thea \ to the face. The usual words of .salutation in Cairo are, ".114w do you sweat absence of presPiration being, in that climate, an indication of fever. The .11utch say "May you: eat a hearty dinner," or," \ How do you sail ?" - Greenlanders use no salutation, be lieving all men equal,. and• none de serving of any - especial \ matk of re spect. The Spaniards say, " How do you . stand_?" and the French, "IloW do you carry yourself ?" And most absurd of all, young-la dies kiss, in public and in private the parlor, in the church and at home; no place is too sacred, no street too public. But . while oscOatory r&A freshment indulged , in by two of the. fair sex seems sweetness 'wasted in the desert air, he is l a I hardened wretch who can witness the operation and not have his heart-11111 with the most wicked envy. AS TO THE tEGB: ' the position of the legs, while the body occupies a sitting posture, is un deniably more correct when the or gans of locomotion are not made to intersect above the knee, but decend gracefully, without coming in contact at any point from Ike kneejoint to the floor. The tendency to cross the legs is commonly' a vagary .of long-legged men, who are at a loss to make 'a proper disposition of their nether extrnifities. If a man Ims 'an ex treinely long leg, he is:. more than mu per Annum In . Advance: NUMBER 11. likely to cross it With the other; Jaen awakard fashion and swing the foot • to and fro like a pendulum! This act is especially noticeable rod the part of shy men, who ,by In unfor tuitous combination ofcircumstances are thrown in the society of ladies. The ability with which they shift - their legs allout---the right leg over the left, and rice versa—is the result of disturbing influences within the mind; and although the sot may ap pear at times a sort of perfunctory performance, it is obviously the re sult of a sympathetic dependence of the muscles of the; leg on the sphere. of the emotions, or . an excited brain. And so by crossing the legs ; it _is urged, one acquires in the society of . ladies a self-possession and ease. It makes no difference with most men how they make up their minds beforehand about crossing their legs; it is impossibl ln they tell us, to AL_ three minutesthe society of pret ty women wh)o have not the faculty of putting them 'at perfect ease with out crossing the legs like a tailor or dancing' master, and with the utmost abandon. Ladies often expostulate against this cosmopolitan practice, but, as Swife said of his sweetheart Stella, the sex takes more delight, as a rule, in making a man feel uncom _ - fortable, and in encouraging - him in an absurdity, than in trying to ex tricate him. Men, too, are at times forgetful, and cross the legs frequent ly without thinking. It; is only_in that state of mental, confusion pro duced by drinking, observes an Eng lish novelist, when a than's legs ap pear to have a memory independent, of his mind. - >- The ptuctice of crossing. the leg#, which is neither elegant nor egmfort able, ha 4 its physical disadvantages, and if Waisted in is likely to, im pede the circulation of the blood, cause the foot to be tortured with prickly sensations, and become dor mant.—Rough Nyee. e) 13,10 : I $11:9 Never was little Myra better pleas- . ed than when taking a walk with her grandfather, for he was so kind and gentle, and talked to her about the things they saw in so pleasant .and cheerful a manner, that it was quite a treat to her. If they . saw any ants at work," Oh,. oh !" he woul&say, " what Makes you so busy wheri none of you have any rent or taxes to pay. But .I see how it is ' • you are-at work for one anoth f er. Remember, Myra, we most not - be idle, for, when we have nothing to do for ourselves, we may always help other people." If they saw a bee winking his way from flower to flower, he was almost sure to speak of it. " Well, Mr. Buzzabout, will you tell us what you are doing ?" But we understand it very well, and will: try mid learn a lesson from you. Miud,'Myra t as the maygets honey from every flower, may you and I seek to get good from everything." In this Myra used to be enter tained by IrsF , grandfather, who lik ,ened her to-a fresh bud that would soon burst into a flower, and himself a faded leaf which .was almost featly- to fall from the,tree. One daY,lrfter Myra had taken`a, pleasant walk with her grandfather : she sat down to do a little sewing with her mother, and then they talk ed together in the following manner : "I wish I l iad Grandfather's eyes, Mother." "Do you, dear? I hardly think he could spare them. But what can you possibly want with tlio:1 eyes of your grandfather,. Myra?" . " Oh, if I had his eyes, I should see all that he sees when we go walk. ing together; but now I cannot see half:po much as he does." • "No ! that is very strange, when you are young and he is. old. He of ten says his sight is not what it used to be; and •then, you know; though his Bible is in large print, he is oblig- ed to - use spectacles." "Yes, Mother, but for•all that he can see more than .I can." "Tell me what you mean, love,for I eannot.at all understand you." • " Why, when we walk out in the fields and lanes, let us look at what we will, he says he sees Grod's good ness in everything." "Ah ! Myra, it e 'is . not grandfather's eyes; but grandfather's heart that you want. May_ God fill your little heart with his fear and love, and then you wlll..see all these things just as plain as your grandfather sees them." Dear reader, do you feel your need of seeing eyes, and an understanding heart ?" Remember, "The fear of r the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." —The Little Gleaner. FROM THE WORLD OF Some curious facts from the world of Nature crop up occasionally, which are well worthy of consideration. For instance, it has been . proved that the bee under certain circumstances turns out to be anything but the pat tern of industry it is proverbially supposed to furnish. -Australian col onies have from time to time taken out 'swarms of bees to their adopted land, in the hope of deriving. practi cal benefit frOm the profusion of flow ers with which the country abounds. For some little time` the newly im ported bee maintained their reputa tion for industry, storing up their food in the comfortable hives provid ed for them,nnd supplying the cola Inists with far_superior honey to that. 'collected by the indigenous `honey producers, the " nfellipones." :Pres ,ently, however, the hives were discov unstocked at the end of autumn, notwithstanding the long summers - of the northern parts of Australia, and it wan s found that the bees entirely neglected to lay by a stock of food, as was.their wont. Though the bees increased and the hives were always regularly \ tenanted, no honey was brought home. . It soon became evi dent that, finding the perennial sum mer of the tropical parts of Austra lia offered them abundance of food, without the intervention along win.. ters, the bees forsook their old habits, gave•themselves up to a life of happy indolence, and no lenger took the trouble to convey their super-abund. , ant supplies to tile hives prepared for them. In short, there being no win ters to provide for, the bee.s gave up the practice of storing honey?: II H